Launch Chapel Hill Startup Accelerator

Launch Chapel Hill is an international award-winning startup accelerator located in downtown Chapel Hill that is managed by the Center for Entrepreneurial Studies at the UNC Kenan-Flagler Business School. If you are entrepreneur who is committed to building an early-stage, high-potential business into a self-sustaining enterprise, consider applying to join the program’s next class of promising innovators. Launch Chapel Hill accepts applications twice a year, and if your venture is selected, you will receive the support, tools and knowledge needed to decrease your risk, reduce your go-to-market time and accelerate the growth of your start-up.

Your company will be matched with one of the program’s entrepreneurs-in-residence. These experts will help connect you to resources and provide you with guidance based on their experience as founders and leaders of multiple startups over the course of their careers. You’ll also have access to a first-class collaborative office space as well as marketing, legal and accounting resources.

Dina Rousset

Associate Director, Center for Entrepreneurial Studies, and Program Manager of Launch Chapel Hill

1789 Venture Lab

With an open, flexible workspace conveniently located at 173 E. Franklin Street in the heart of downtown Chapel Hill, 1789 Venture Lab is the bridge between your on-campus entrepreneurial activity and the larger world. If you are a UNC-Chapel Hill student or alumnus who is interested in starting your own venture, you can receive special support, including access to relevant mentors, business coaches and essential services (legal, accounting, etc.). You can also take advantage of regular workshops, classes, office hours and events hosted by the 1789 team in partnership with groups like Launch Chapel Hill, the Campus Y, the UNC Minor in Entrepreneurship and the Carolina Challenge.

Liz Tracy

Center for Entrepreneurial Studies

The UNC Kenan-Flagler Business School is committed to developing transformative entrepreneurial leaders as founders, funders and growth executives. To support that commitment, the Center for Entrepreneurial Studies, which as founded in 1997 through the generosity of Frank Hawkins Kenan, offers a comprehensive array of curricular and co-curricular programs. These programs are driven by the rubric Learn-Launch-Lead (L3)™ and help you develop skills and gain direct experience not found at other business schools. Through a broad-spectrum entrepreneurship curriculum, CES offers you a collaborative, hands-on and results-driven learning environment designed to build an entrepreneurial mindset. As a business student, you will continue to benefit from the center’s global network of alumni mentors and coaches after you graduate and transition careers.

Ted Zoller

CUBE Social Innovation Incubator

At the CUBE, UNC-Chapel Hill’s social innovation incubator, students and faculty tackle pressing social issues. Pilot funding provided by CUBE since 2013 has helped build numerous companies – a mix of LLCs and 501c3s – working on a variety of issues: food security, clean water, clean tech, offering safe late-night transportation via electric vehicles, improving arts and STEM education, providing vocational training for young adults with autism, and many more. While not every social venture incubated in CUBE spins off into a sustainable enterprise, many do.

If you have an idea for a social venture, you can apply to enter the CUBE program through a competitive process. If your venture is selected, you can receive seed funding, mentoring, co-working space, pro-bono support services, expert feedback from nationally renowned social entrepreneurs, and the individualized assistance you need to create a successful social enterprise.

Laura Fieselman

KickStart Labs

If you are working to grow a science- or technology-based startup at Carolina, KickStart Labs provides on-campus wet lab incubator that you can take advantage of. The state-of-the-art facility provides bench space, office space, shared areas (cold-room, hoods) and shared equipment (sinks, distilled water, gases, etc.). The short-term lease and access to capital equipment are ideal options if you have a startup at the SBIR or early venture capital funding stages.

Don Rose

KickStart Venture Services

KickStart Venture Services, which is part of the Office of Technology Commercialization at UNC-Chapel Hill, helps Carolina faculty form, develop and grow startup companies based on University intellectual property. If you are a faculty member working on an IP-based startup, the KickStart team can provide you with coaching, mentoring and early-stage funding. The team can also connect you with key service providers and offer guidance about issues related to company management, investors and space.

Don Rose

Social Innovation and Entrepreneurship (SIE) Lab – UNC School of Social Work

The SIE Lab, within the Jordan Institute for Families, provides support and resources for students and faculty to explore, design, implement, replicate and scale new ways of addressing complex social problems. The lab is home to social venture startups, an entrepreneur-in-residence, the NC Data Partnership for Social and Health Innovation, several co-working spaces, and a large meeting space.

The lab is also a field placement site for graduate social work students. Students placed here practice new methods of creating social change, while providing innovative consulting for non-profits and socially-focused enterprises. These students master foundational business skills that amplify their effectiveness and impact in their careers. The lab’s co-working offices are available for anyone on campus to use on a first-come, first-serve basis. The larger main room is also available for meetings or larger gatherings and can be reserved by contacting Christina Coillot at coillot@email.unc.edu.

Gary M. Nelson, DSW

Director Social Innovation and Entrepreneurship Lab, The Jordan Institute for Families; Thomas Willis Lambeth Distinguished Chair in Public Policy, UNC School of Social Work

KickStart New Enterprise Opportunity (NEO)

When you’re creating a startup, getting advice and making the right connections might be enough for you to launch your venture. Or you might find that you need more support. If you are a faculty member at UNC-Chapel Hill working on a very early-stage technology, the KickStart NEO program can assist you in moving your idea forward. This program is designed to help you form, launch and grow the company by providing a variety of services: incorporation and documentation, consulting for SBIR grants, technology evaluations and CEO recruitment.

Don Rose

Technology Commercialization Carolina

Technology Commercialization Carolina (TCC) provides inventors and entrepreneurs with a variety of resources to help them start or accelerate a business. For instance, you can work with TCC to get information and analysis about patents and markets that you can use to help develop your idea into a working technology or piece of intellectual property. If you are a UNC-affiliated student, faculty or staff member, TCC can provide you with support services related to licensing and new venture creation. Or if you have a private company in North Carolina, TCC can pair you with MBA students to help you solve any number of business issues that you may be experiencing.

Jason Doherty

Director, Startup Consulting Program, Office of Commercialization and Economic Development and UNC Kenan-Flagler Business School

Workroom FashionMash

Workroom FashionMash is both a workspace for prototyping and building, as well as a way of thinking. Since 2009, the program has given advertising students in UNC-Chapel Hill’s Media and Journalism School the chance to work directly with fashion and lifestyle brands to envision new ideas. As a student, you’ll work with clients to move beyond the page or screen and bring concepts to life.

Dana McMahan

Center for Health Innovation

The UNC Center for Health Innovation operated by the UNC School of Medicine and UNC Health Care is a space to experiment with the creative disruption of health care delivery. It supports moving great ideas toward implementation, provides a forum for the formation of public-private partnerships, and serves as a learning laboratory where internal and external partners can test their visions for promoting a healthier future. Are you innovative person or part of an organization that wants to help transform the national health care delivery system? If so, the Center for Health Innovation team invites you to contact them to discuss collaborative opportunities.

Carol Lewis

Dreamers-Who-Do Program

Innovate Carolina gives students at UNC-Chapel Hill the chance to submit an application for the Dreamers-Who-Do Program, which can help them move their ideas forward and turn novel concepts into a concrete solution. Dreamers-Who-Do sponsorships provide financial support for student projects, programs and guest speakers that help Carolina students learn what it means to be innovators and entrepreneurs and gives them opportunities to put those insights into practice. These activities may involve programs or events based on the UNC-Chapel Hill campus as well as initiatives that involve travel to competitions, conferences and events that help students develop an innovative mindset and skillset.

Sheryl Waddell

BUSI 500: Entrepreneurship and Business Planning

The primary goals of this course are to give the student a broad understanding of the field of entrepreneurship and to introduce the important tools and skills necessary to create and grow a successful new venture. The course is designed to simulate the real-life activities of entrepreneurs in the startup stage of a new venture. Students develop an understanding of the elements required to start a new business and hear from successful entrepreneurs about their journey and then evaluate real business plans for entrepreneurs who are just starting their journey.

Jim Kitchen

Faculty Entrepreneurship Workshop

The Faculty Entrepreneurship Workshop encourages an entrepreneurial mindset in UNC faculty and equips them with proven skills used by successful entrepreneurs. Hosted by Innovate Carolina and designed and led by Professor Keith Sawyer in the School of Education, the workshop is based on research on creativity and entrepreneurship and conducted in UNC’s School of Education and in the Kenan-Flagler Business School.

To participate in the prestigious workshop as a faculty member, you must be nominated by your dean and invited to participate by Chancellor Carol Folt. The workshop tasks you with bringing a challenging problem or innovative solution to share. During the two-and-a-half-day session, you’ll work as part of a team with other faculty and collaborate with a cross-disciplinary group of coaches from across the UNC campus. You’ll explore ways to advance your ideas, apply entrepreneurship tools to real-world scenarios and enhance your business pitch. At the conclusion of the workshop, your faculty team will pitch its idea to a panel of judges to get real-time feedback, giving you the insight needed to raise your solution to the next level.

Michelle Bolas

StartUp-UNC

StartUp-UNC is a series of courses that helps faculty, staff and students from across the UNC-Chapel Hill campus turn new ideas into viable ventures. The StartUp program is designed to engage you in an intense academic exercise that teaches you a process for evaluating and launching new ventures that you can then replicate. It will prepare you with a lifelong entrepreneurial mindset that you can apply beyond the classroom experience.

Ted Zoller

T.W. Lewis Clinical Professor of Strategy and Entrepreneurship; Director of the Center for Entrepreneurial Studies

BioEntrepreneur Workshop

This two-day workshop brings biomedical researchers and clinicians from UNC-Chapel Hill and Duke University together for an overview of life science startups. During the first day, you’ll learn about the life science startup ecosystem and its various players, while hearing from a number of faculty entrepreneurs who share their stories. One the second day, you’ll focus on the mechanics and decision-making involved in startups. The latter part of the second day also gives you the chance to work one-on-one with local entrepreneurs to create a 12-month action plan.

Don Rose

E(I) Lab

The E(I) Lab is a six-month experiential program that brings together graduate students, professional students and postdocs from diverse disciplines across UNC to conceive, develop and test innovative solutions to unmet needs in health care. Teams will be given generous financial support to develop the necessary prototypes, be inventors on patents, and be trained in various aspects of entrepreneurship and innovation. The top teams receive monetary prizes in addition to potential seed investments.

Sam Lai

Blackstone Entrepreneurs Network

The Blackstone Entrepreneurs Network is a collaborative program between UNC-Chapel Hill, NC State University, Duke University and NC Central University to accelerate the growth of high-potential companies through the hands-on help of seasoned serial entrepreneurs and their networks of investors. Tapping the region’s veteran entrepreneurs, the network has created a team of entrepreneurs-in-residence (EIR’s) that helps to identify marketable innovations at universities and startups with high-growth potential. The result? Since 2012, the Blackstone EIR’s have met with more than 800 companies, and those companies have raised more than $400 million.

Bryan McGann

Eshelman Institute for Innovation

The Eshelman Institute for Innovation accelerates the creation and development of ideas that lead to discoveries and transformative changes in education, research and health care. Through strategic collaborations inside and outside of UNC-Chapel Hill, the institute creates jobs and spurs economic development in North Carolina and beyond. Whether you are a UNC faculty member, student or part of the staff, the institute can provide you with resources to engage in timely, opportunistic, creative, risky and innovative work that advances the mission of the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy.

Mieke Lynch

Research, Innovation and Global Solutions for Public Health

Research, Innovation and Global Solutions empowers faculty members, students and staff at the UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health to solve local and global health problems through research, innovation and practice. It provides guidance and support in the areas of:

Research

Innovation and entrepreneurship

Global health

It also manages and provides support for several Gillings programs and initiatives, including programs funded by the Gillings gift.

Gillings Innovation Labs

The Gillings Innovation Labs focus on achieving fundamental breakthroughs in public health. If you’re a faculty member who has a primary appointment in the UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health, you are eligible to apply for one of the annual awards offered by the program. The award will allow you to engage in cutting-edge research, translate interventions to high-impact settings, and develop novel technologies or methodologies that improve public health, locally and globally.

As a principal investigator (PI), you are encouraged to involve Gillings or other UNC-Chapel Hill students in your project. Your proposal may also include a co-PI from another department or school at Carolina.

Julie MacMillan

Reese News Lab

The Reese News Lab is an experimental media and research project based at the UNC School of Media and Journalism focused on developing and testing new ideas for the media industry in the form of a pre-startup. As part of this student team, you research ideas for media products by answering three questions: Can it be done? Does anyone actually need this? And, could it make money? To answer these questions, you collaborate with other students in the lab to create prototypes, interview and survey potential customers and develop business strategies for your product. As you work, you document your recommendations on whether you believe your product will work. Ultimately, you and your team have the chance to present your idea to the public. At Reese News Lab, you get to team with other students who come from a variety of backgrounds, including journalism, business and computer science, among others.

Carolina Center for Public Service

The Carolina Center for Public Service connects the energy and expertise of both the University and the community to provide students, faculty and staff with deep and transformative experiences, while meeting the needs of North Carolina and beyond. The Center strengthens the University’s public service commitment by promoting scholarship and service that are responsive to the concerns of the state and contribute to the common good. If you’re interested in getting involved, you can participate in a variety of engaged scholarship and service programs offered by the center that allow you to collaborate with others and find interdisciplinary solutions to local and global challenges.

Lynn Blanchard

Innovation Showcase

Innovation should be much more than a process. It should be an experience – a memorable event that’s live, in-person and interactive.

And that’s exactly what you’ll find when you attend the annual Innovation Showcase at UNC-Chapel Hill, which is hosted by Innovate Carolina under the Vice Chancellor’s Office for Innovation, Entrepreneurship and Economic Development.

This is your chance to connect with other enterprising researchers and business enthusiasts – including UNC faculty and students – whose work is poised to make a significant economic impact in North Carolina and beyond. You’ll get to meet and learn from the most inventive minds from Carolina community as they share their latest innovations with the entrepreneurial and investment community. Hear their pitches. See their demos. And have in-depth conversations to understand the inspiration behind their ideas, how they’re making a difference and where they’re going next. The showcase is also a great chance to meet and learn from the leaders of numerous UNC programs that support these ventures as part of Carolina’s universitywide innovation ecosystem.

Michelle Bolas

Carolina THINK

Carolina THINK is a student organization that serves as the entrepreneurship club for undergraduate students. The organization raises awareness and interest in the entrepreneurial field and helps students discover entrepreneurship as a discipline that expands beyond the confines of conventional business. Carolina THINK shows students that everyone has the potential of becoming an entrepreneur. Besides hosting a wide range of events to help students develop the connections and skills they need to succeed as entrepreneurs, the organization helps students by pointing them towards available resources on campus to ensure that everyone has a smooth entrepreneurial journey without feeling lost.

Andrew Skinner

NC TraCS Institute

The North Carolina Translational and Clinical Sciences (NC TraCS) Institute, the integrated home of the Clinical and Translational Science Awards (CTSA) program at UNC, is supported through the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The Consortium members share a common vision to reduce the time it takes for laboratory discoveries to become treatments for patients, and to engage communities in clinical research efforts.

If you are a principal investigator working in clinical and translational science, you can benefit from working with faculty and staff experts across NC TraCS who can provide you with with targeted, comprehensive and interdisciplinary solutions related to your area of focus. These include a no-cost, personalized mentoring program that offers you highly specialized expertise in translational research.

John Buse

Community Development Law Clinic

The Community Development Law (CDL) Clinic is a two-semester clinic in which third-year students provide corporate and transactional counsel to North Carolina nonprofit community development organizations. As a student working in the clinic, you can develop skills in corporate and transactional law. At the same time, you also get the opportunity serve the legal needs of under-resourced communities in North Carolina.

Tom Kelley

Carolina Creates

Carolina Creates is UNC’s Incubator for Student Creativity. The mission of the student organization is to foster innovative creation on campus by providing the resources needed to make ideas happen. Examples of successfully incubated projects include campus organizations like TEDxUNC and Should Does. Carolina Creates is sponsored by Innovate Carolina and UNC Student Affairs.

Graham Treasure

Carolina Union Design Services

Carolina Union Design Services helps UNC-Chapel Hill students, faculty and staff create targeted communications about their organizations. If you’d like to market your department or group, you can collaborate with Design Services on print and web/interactive design projects. By taking advantage of print and digital channels, your group can attract more members, advertise your mission or purpose, direct people through physical space, or promote an event, contest or survey.

Watson University Incubator

Watson University is the first incubator leading to a degree for the world’s next generation of change-makers and social entrepreneurs. The program is for student innovators, leaders and entrepreneurs ages 18 to 23. As a student in the program, you may go through the semester incubator or the bachelor’s degree track. The Watson University incubator also offers you master courses taught by leading mentors, practitioners and entrepreneurs as well as training in social entrepreneurship and personal development. Additionally, the Watson Lab can help you take your venture from idea to launch. You can apply to Watson’s semester program to incubate your idea before (gap year), during or immediately after your undergraduate studies.

Audacity Factory

Audacity Factory is an accelerator and collaborative located in Raleigh that is focused on ending modern-day slavery. If you are a social innovators with ideas toward this cause and are accepted into the accelerator, you’ll be connected to mentors, advisors and a network as they work on audacious movements to fight modern slavery worldwide. You will focus on measurable impact, scalability and sustainability, while using technology and digital marketing best practices to engage millions.

iNvictus Office Center

iNvictus serves as the hub of minority entrepreneurship and an ecosystem that provides mentoring, consulting and support for minority entrepreneurs and startups. It is also a vibrant co-working and collaborative office space for business owners and professionals. Its up-to-date amenities, flexible scheduling and affordable rates allows you to be innovative, creative and inspired. In addition, you may benefit from the Invictus Forward Outreach Program, which provides aid, mentoring, access to funding and support for minority-owned businesses and entrepreneurs.

NC IDEA LABS

Around half of all new startups fail in the first 12 months. NC IDEA LABS, formerly Groundwork Labs, helps founders make better decisions, make those decisions faster and take the proper steps to avoid mistakes frequently made by new entrepreneurs. Essentially, it helps reduce risk.

From a program standpoint, NC IDEA LABS looks a lot like a technology accelerator – it allows you to participate in a mentor-driven, selective, 12-week program. The difference is that it does not make an investment, and you do not have to give up equity in your company. You can take advantage of the program at no cost.

Techstars

Techstars is much more than a three-month mentorship-driven accelerator program. It makes entrepreneurship accessible by opening doors to capital, mentorship, marketing, business development, customer acquisition and talent recruitment. The program’s global ecosystem of founders, mentors, investors and corporate partners work together to create a network of support that lasts throughout your entrepreneurial journey. Once your company is accepted in the program, you will automatically be offered a $100,000 convertible note, $20,000 in exchange for 6 percent common stock with an equity-back guarantee, and 400 perks worth over $1 million. You can also connect with founders, mentors and investors at local alumni events, the program’s annual founder celebration and at other meetings.

Unreasonable Institute Accelerators

The Unreasonable Institute unites entrepreneurs with the potential to address major problems at scale: poverty, lack of education and access to clean water, for example. Its customized accelerator programs located around the world bring together resources, mentors, funders and a global network to support ventures that are tackling the world’s biggest social and environmental problems. If you are deeply committed to social impact, are plugged into the existing entrepreneurial ecosystem, and will tirelessly work to support your region’s entrepreneurs, then this is the opportunity for you. You can apply to work with the Unreasonable Institute to launch an accelerator lab and customize it for your local context.

Y Combinator

Twice a year, Y Combinator invests a small amount of money ($120,000) in a large number of startups (approximately 100). If your startup is selected for the program, you will move to Silicon Valley for three months, and Y Combinator will work intensively with you to get your company into the best possible shape and refine its pitch to investors. Each cycle culminates in Demo Day, when your startup will present to a carefully selected, invite-only audience.

ThinkHouse

ThinkHouse is a 10-month, pre-accelerator fellowship program in Raleigh, North Carolina. This action-learning, residential program is based out of a fully renovated house that serves as a co-living space for entrepreneurs. As a ThinkHouse fellow, you get the environment, network, resources and skills required to build a profitable and scalable company. In addition to a strong emphasis on personal leadership development and team building, the ThinkHouse program immerses you in a hands-on boot camp designed to help young entrepreneurs develop a viable product or service and earn revenue. You can also work out of HQ Raleigh, a dynamic entrepreneurial co-working space within easy biking distance to ThinkHouse. To be eligible, you must call the Research Triangle area your primary home for the duration of the fellowship and must be working full-time on your venture.

American Underground

Whether you’re a solo-entrepreneur, remote employee or have a 30-person team, you can take advantage of unique workspaces at American Underground designed to accommodate any stage of your business life cycle. Your startup will benefit from a powerful community of thinkers and doers, plus events that help you network, learn and succeed. American Underground also serves as a Google for Entrepreneurs Tech Hub, one of just seven in North America, which offers you unique access to Google and its products. Plus, with one location in Raleigh and three locations in downtown Durham, you can choose from the spot that works best for you.

HQ Raleigh

Designed for entrepreneurs by entrepreneurs, HQ Raleigh offers an exciting new workspace and a members-based community for Raleigh’s burgeoning innovation scene. As an HQ Raleigh member, you can gain access to a thriving network of entrepreneurs, mentors, service providers and capital connections. You’ll also enjoy amenities that include turn-key office spaces, co-working spaces, conference rooms, huddle rooms, a cafe space with a full-service kitchen, a bar, and a multi-purpose room for classes, workshops and events.

The Frontier

Looking for a free place to plug in, a private office for your growing company, or something a bit larger in the Research Triangle Park area? It doesn’t matter how big or small your company is, everyone that walks through the doors of The Frontier receives a bevy of benefits and can get connected to the larger local entrepreneurship community. This centrally located convening space in the heart of the Triangle gives you access to Wi-Fi, meeting rooms, events and parking. Even better, you’ll find that most of the space is free.